Code Talker from Arizona not offended by Redskins nickname

A leader of the Navajo Code Talkers who appeared at a Washington Redskins home
football game said Wednesday the team name is a symbol of loyalty and courage _
not a slur as asserted by critics who want it changed.

Roy Hawthorne, 87, of Lupton, Ariz., was one of four Code Talkers honored for
their service in World War II during the Monday night game against the San
Francisco 49ers.

Hawthorne, vice president of the Navajo Code Talkers Association, said the
group’s trip was paid for by the Redskins. The four men met briefly with team
owner Dan Snyder but did not discuss the name, Hawthorne said.

Still, he said he would endorse the name if asked, and the televised appearance
in which three of the Indians wore Redskins jackets spoke for itself.

“We didn’t have that in mind but that is undoubtedly what we did do,”
Hawthorne said when asked if he was intending to send a statement with the
appearance. “My opinion is that’s a name that not only the team should keep,
but that’s a name that’s American.”

Monday night’s brief, on-field ceremony came as some Indians and civil rights
leaders wage a “Change the Mascot” campaign that targets the term redskins as a
racial epithet.

The Navajos’ appearance drew heated comments from both sides on social media,
including assertions that the Code Talkers were being used as props in a public
relations stunt meant to deflect criticism over the name.

Jacqueline Pata, head of the National Congress of American Indians, called the
appearance “a political play rather than a heartfelt recognition of the Code
Talkers.”

Pata, a member of the Tlingit Tribe of Alaska, said she reveres the Code
Talkers for the work they have done but added that people often fail to
recognize that the origins of the term redskin date to a period when Indians
faced efforts to annihilate their culture.

“We were outlawed during that same period the mascot was created from
practicing our own religion and our own cultures,” she said. “That term is
associated with getting rid of the Indians.”

Snyder has called the team name and mascot a “badge of honor.” The name dates
to the team’s first years in Boston in the 1930s and has survived numerous
outside efforts to change it. The team has been in the Washington, D.C., area
since 1937.

Redskins Senior Vice President Tony Wyllie said there was no truth to
suggestions that the Code Talkers were used to bolster the team’s resistance to
a new name.

“They’re American heroes, and they deserved recognition,” he said.

Also attending Monday’s game were Code Talkers President Peter MacDonald Sr.,
George Willie Sr. and George James Sr.

The Navajo Code Talkers used codes derived from their native language to shield
military communications from interception by Japanese troops. Hawthorne said
there are now about 30 surviving Code Talkers.

The trip to Washington was the second this month for Hawthorne, who last week
joined Code Talkers from other tribes who received Congressional Gold Medals for
the role they played in World War I and World War II. Members of the Navajo were
recognized in 2000.

The Navajo are perhaps the best known of the Code Talkers, but the Defense
Department says the program began in 1918 and at its peak included more than 400
Indians who used 33 dialects to make their codes indecipherable.